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Alzheimers Instances are Continuing to Increase and so are the costs and burdens


Though there are still some in the medical industries that contend Alzheimer’s is on the decline, they are certainly in the minority. Most medical professionals are singing a completely different tune now, including a number of doctors that are reporting that this specific medical condition is not only increasing in its prevalence – but the costs and burdens placed upon those who are fighting this disease are increasing as well.

Karen Garner knows this better than most, as her husband Jim – a former Air Force Senior Master Sgt. has been living with it is crippling and debilitating disease for years and years now. Sometimes she’ll find her husband Jim sitting in the kitchen of their Virginia area home crying because he feels as though his self-worth has been completely eroded – contending that “all he’s good for any more is doing the dishes and the laundry”.

Only 48 years old, Jim was diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer’s disease three years ago when he was 45 – a debilitating disease that caused him to lose his job. He’s only one of 35 million people worldwide living with some form or another of dementia, and medical researchers, professionals, and experts are projecting that the number living with Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia should triple in just the next 40 years. By 2050 online medical services and other medical professionals as adjusted that some 120 million people could be living with this very serious condition – and even more if the trend continues to shift ever upward on an annual basis.


People with Dementia Require Very Specific Help and Care

Those 35 million people or so that are dealing with Alzheimer’s disease right now are dealing with an almost unimaginable burden unless you’ve gone through a similar scenario. Sources in studies suggest that people with dementia have very specific and special needs for care, a delicate balancing act between making sure that they are safe, secure, and protected without robbing them of what little is left of their personality and cognitive abilities.

Some experts are suggesting that turning over those dealing with dementia to full-time medical professionals and having all of their day to day needs met only causes the condition to speed up and to generate the brain even faster, though the jury is still out as to whether or not there is any scientific backing to this hypothesis.


Dementia Can Still Be a Rather Difficult to Diagnose

Alzheimer’s disease is only one specific form of dementia, of which there are literally hundreds and hundreds that caused major disruptions throughout families all over the globe. In nearly stages of dementia patients are generally just a bit confused or a little bit foggy when it comes to dealing with more complex cognitive thinking, but things can rapidly devolve – or slowly erode – over time depending upon the specifics of the condition.

And nearly stages these patients are almost always capable of taking care of themselves when it comes to day to day tasks, and it may not even be tremendously noticeable that they’re having a hard time focusing. Early dementia can be confused with stress, pressure, and anxiety related cognitive slits and mishaps – which is why we see so many people struggle to get the early intervention that may prove valuable.

Things from their only get worse, with more and more important decisions becoming impossible to make, important dates and functions never being remembered, and in the final stages it’s not uncommon for people suffering from dementia to forget entirely people that they’ve known their entire lives – people that they’ve built amazing relationships with every single step of the way.


Dementia Turns Lives Upside Down – and is now crippling bank accounts

Not only does this specific medical condition has an overwhelming emotional impact (there’s nothing quite like watching the slow and steady decline of someone you love slip into someone that barely recognizes you), the costs for Alzheimer’s treatment and care is continuing to skyrocket as demands increase.

Later stages of this specific disease (as we’ve outlined above) need full and regular care almost around-the-clock, which can rack up a pretty tremendous bill especially if you’re unprepared or uninsured.

Combine that with cutting edge and truly breakthrough medical advances that are showing at least a little bit of movement as far as curing in treating Alzheimer’s, and you’re talking about amazing medical bills that can build and build in a hurry.


It’s important not to give up

The most important thing for you to understand (or anyone who is dealing with Alzheimer’s or trying to take care of someone living with this condition) is that there is absolutely no need whatsoever to just give up or just give in.

If you are feeling desperate about your situation, it’s critical that you contact any of the groups associated with the Alzheimer’s Association or the World Alzheimer’s Report, groups that specifically work to further connect caregivers and family members of those suffering from dementia to make sure that they have the necessary support group to get them through the rough and rocky times.

Dementia is a very serious and very real medical condition that needs our full support to find a cure and help those suffering from this degenerative disease. Online doctors the world over are working double overtime to help provide real relief for the situations, giving glimmers of hope in the darkness that we one day may completely eliminate conditions like Alzheimer’s entirely. Let’s hope this happen sooner than later.


 

 

Mitchell Cohen
Mitchell Cohen, M.D. is Board Certified doctor specializing in Orthopedic Medicine and Spinal Surgery. Graduated from Hahnemann University in Philadelphia, PA with a degree in Human Physiology (1983) and subsequently achieved his medical degree in 1987 from Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. Dr Cohen did his Surgical Residency at the University of New Mexico in 1992 as well as a Spine Fellowship in 1993. Dr. Cohen has published the following medical journals: "Biomechanical Efficiency of Spinal Systems in Thorocolumbar Fractures" (1993), "Kaneda Anterior Spinal Instrumentation" and "Spinal Fusion Stabilization amongst many others. View Dr Cohen's Twitter Page.

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